Tonga-Speaking Peoples of Zambia and Zimbabwe
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Product details
- ISBN 9780761836292
- Weight: 599g
- Dimensions: 149 x 228mm
- Publication Date: 21 Dec 2006
- Publisher: University Press of America
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
Elizabeth Colson is a giant of twentieth and twenty-first century social science scholarship. For sixty years (beginning in 1946), she has carried out regular and intensive anthropological research amongst one of central Africa's most important ethnic groups, the Tonga of Zambia and Zimbabwe. She is the author of an astonishing number of books and articles concerning virtually every aspect of Tonga life, including religion, law, marriage, education, and the impact of relocation.
Colson has made important theoretical and comparative contributions as well. She has inspired, encouraged, and greatly influenced three generations of scholars studying the Tonga. Fourteen of those scholars, from disciplines including social and physical anthropology, history, political science, and education have contributed essays for this volume. In addition, Colson has written a concluding essay for this work in which she gives her reflections on her own and others' scholarship. This work sheds light on the Tonga's pre-colonial past; colonial transformations; religious and political life; gender relations; growing up and growing old; the consequences of resettlement; and much more. It is a major contribution to several strains of African studies.
Chet Lancaster received his doctorate from the University of California at Berkeley, where he was a student of Elizabeth Colson. He published The Goba of Zambezi: Sex Roles, Economics, and Change (1981). He taught for many years at the University of Oklahoma.
Kenneth P. Vickery (Ph.D. Yale University) is Alumni Distinguished Undergraduate Professor of History at North Carolina State University, Raleigh. His previous works include Black and White in Southern Zambia and several articles on African economics and social history.
